HIV-2 genetic variation and DNA load in asymptomatic carriers and AIDS cases in Guinea-Bissau
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes and Human Retrovirology, Volume 16, No. 1, Year 1997
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The purpose of this study was to document which genetic subtypes of HIV- 2 are present in Guinea-Bissau and to investigate whether asymptomatic HIV-2 carriers and AIDS patients carry distinct genetic variants. A secondary aim was to correlate proviral DNA load to clinical and immunologic status of the patients. Thirty-eight asymptomatic HIV-2 carriers and 11 AIDS patients from Bissau, Guinea-Bissau were included in a cross-sectional study in which HIV- 2 env V3 sequences, HIV-2 DNA load, and CD4-positive (CD4+) lymphocyte counts were determined. Phylogenetic analyses showed that all investigated subjects carried subtype A HIV-2 variants and that the sequences from AIDS patients and asymptomatic carriers did not form distinct subclusters in the tree. As expected, patients with AIDS had significantly higher median HIV-2 DNA load than did asymptomatic carriers (4.6 vs. 2.0 log10 HIV-2 DNA copies/106 CD4+ lymphocytes). Our study indicates that the HIV-2 epidemic in Guinea-Bissau is almost exclusively caused by subtype A HIV-2 variants and that the HIV-2 infections among the asymptomatic carriers and AIDS cases included in the study do not have distinct epidemiologic histories.